taking place over the next few hours, you will see on your screen the life pictures and you will also be able to see the results of those different amendments as they come through. they will be there on your screen, you would see the results and the numbers as we build to the main votes, the culmination of all of this, after those 11 amendments go through. so, you won t miss a thing here on bbc news. here 5 our political editor chris mason: the government has promised to stop the boats. the numbers are down but migrants keep coming. this was dover this morning. the rwanda plan is about putting people off attempting this crossing but no one who has made this journey has been sent there yet. so what does the rwandan president make of it all came back you are getting hundreds of millions of uk taxpayers money and not seeing a refugee. if they don t come, we can return the money. if people don t come we can return the money , he says. the uk has already handed over £240 million
and the independent trade economist rebecca harding. we start here in the uk where the economy is expected to do worse than every other major advanced country this year, including russia which has been hit by a barrage of economic sanctions from the west. that s according to the international monetary fund, the imf. it said the uk economy will shrink by 0.6% in 2023, rather than grow slightly as previously predicted. here s what they ve had to say. we have a very challenging environment in the united kingdom. we have a large terms of charts meaning that an energy crisis is very strong and in a country where there is a high dependence on liquid natural gas in the high pass through of the wholesale price to the retail price and this is heading towards the cost of living crisis and we have an environment as a response to this high inflation, there was a tightening of monetary policy by the bank of england and in the uk, this fits quickly into mortgages because a lot of mortgag
on her instagram page. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the writer and broadcaster, mihir bose, and kieran andrews, who s political editor at the times scotland. tomorrow s front pages, starting with, the i sugests liz truss is facing fresh peril after backbenchers hinted tonight they won t support an end to the pension triple lock. the telegraph also leads on the threat to pensions. the guardian strikes a similartone quoting one mp who branded the proposed budget cuts as toxic . while the express is more forthright on behalf of its readers issuing a warning to truss not to touch the triple lock. the times meanwhile says that the new chancellor is also planning to delay the introduce of the cap on social care costs. the metro leads on new polling which suggests the pm s approval rating has sunk to a record low of minus 70 per cent. the mirror focuses on the tale of a veteran who faced a 26 hour wait on a t
key debates going on in pennsylvania for the senate race, in colorado for the senate race and in michigan, the battle for who will stay in power or be the next governor and in new york, a race that shouldn t even be a race in this overwhelmingly blue state where the empire state contestants right now will have their one and only debate tonight. what a night. what a day. what a next two weeks. welcome. i m neil cavuto. this is your world. a very political world where front and center is the rush to close the deal. typically this favors the party that is out of power. growing signs that it might really favor the party out of power. way too early to say. two weeks can produce a lot of difference results. let s go to harrisburg pennsylvania. bryan llenas has more from pennsylvania. bryan? neil, good afternoon. for one night only, a political debate in pennsylvania. fetterman and oz debating in person for one hour. no tv audience. it will be live no audience, live audience.
at a vigil, three days after his assassination. and monty norman, the composer of one of the best known pieces of music ever, the james bond theme, dies at the age of 94 it s six in the morning in singapore and eleven pm in london where it s been announced that the uk will get a new leader of the conservative party and therefore a new prime minister on the 5th of september. it will take that long to choose boris johnson s successor due to the way the party organises the contest. anyone who wants the job will have to first secure the backing of 20 of theirfellow members of parliament and then make their way through a series of votes. we begin our coverage with this report from our political editor chris mason. thank you all very much, thank you. from borisjohnson s resignation, to the emerging cacophony of voices trying to replace him. visions and videos, talks of their past and our future, promises and persuasion, and lots of it. is raising taxes during a cost of livi